Copious Notes

The journal of a Kentucky culture vulture

  • Nov
    6

    Switchfoot’s This is the Sound rocks the new Blackberry commercial.

    During the past year, there have been public signs that Christian pop music is on the rise.

    Last spring on American Idol, a pair of openly Christian ­contestants vied for the title and one of them, Kris Allen, won. Your TV doesn’t have to be on long to hear the rumblings of Switchfoot, one of Christian music’s top bands, on commercials for BlackBerry’s new Storm2 smartphone. Late in the summer, when Christian rockers Skillet released their latest, Awake, it perched itself atop iTunes’ rock album charts and at No. 3 overall.

    Pretty good stuff for a niche genre, eh?

    But beneath the surface, there have been rumblings for some time.

    Late in the summer, Gospel Music Association president and CEO John Styll stepped down, saying he was sacrificing his salary in an effort to stabilize the ­organization, which has laid off a number of staffers. Then, in October, the GMA held an all-star fund-raiser - we’re talking Amy Grant and Michael W. Smith ­heading a lineup that included Casting Crowns and other chart toppers - billed as “Save the GMA.”

    Even though that $1,000-a-head event apparently was a success, raising more than $350,000, there were rumors late last month that the GMA was closing its doors.

    The association’s troubles come on the heels of other setbacks in Christian music, such as the shutdown of the print edition of the industry’s ­flagship ­publication, CCM Magazine, which was founded by Styll, and ­attendance drops at some festivals.

    Christian music also has faced the double whammy of the ­economic downturn and the ­effects of a rapidly changing music ­marketplace less dependent on major labels for distribution and increasingly challenged by problems such as digital music piracy. (Yes, people are stealing Christian music. Go figure.)

    These are problems affecting the music industry as a whole, and you know that if the top of the pops is getting battered, the foundations of a niche genre really must be getting shaken.

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  • Feb
    24
    Ben Sollee at The Dame, Dec. 11. Photo by Rich Copley | LexGo.

    Ben Sollee at The Dame, Dec. 11. Photo by Rich Copley | LexGo.

    Ben Sollee, the Lexington-raised cellist who has carved out a unique career with the instrument, will make his national television debut tonight on Jimmy Kimmel Live.

    Sollee grew up in Lexington, studying cello and playing in the Central Kentucky Youth Orchestra before joining Michael Jonathan’s Folkboy Orchestra on Woodsongs Old Time Radio Hour. He went on the University of Louisville and since graduating in 2006 has developed a singular career with the usually-classical instrument, integrating it into American folk and blues music. Sollee has recorded two critically acclaimed albums and an EP.

    In December, he packed out The Dame for a homecoming concert. Click here to read Walter Tunis’ review.

    Jimmy Kimmel Live airs at midnight in ABC, WTVQ TV-36 (Insight Channel 10) in Lexington.

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About Rich Copley & Copious Notes

Raised by opera-loving parents in a rock ’n’ roll world, Rich Copley has parlayed his broad interests into his career writing about arts and entertainment. Since 1998, he has covered performing arts, film and faith-based popular culture for the Lexington Herald-Leader, the daily newspaper in Lexington, Ky. MORE | E-mail Rich


 

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